Edward Pinkowski

Edward Pinkowski (born August 12, 1916) is an American writer, journalist, and historian. He was presented with the Polish American Historical Society's Haiman Award in 1989,[1] and the Cavalier's Cross of the Order of Merit by the President of Poland in 2001.[2] He turned 100 in August 2016.[3]

Books

Pills, Pen & Politics

Pinkowski's book on Confederate soldier and Baton Rouge mayor Leon Jastremski is the only biography written on the subject. Reviewer Donald Everett found Pinkowski's book took effort to identify Polish immigrants and Polish American families in Louisiana at the time, but at no time could Pinkowski definitively prove that Jastremski had any friends or personal connection to them other than his Polish name.[4] James S. Pula criticized Pills, Pen & Politics because it did not offer enough analysis of the inner motivations behind Jastremski's political career.[5]

Lattimer Massacre (1950)

Lattimer Massacre historian Michael Novak credited Pinkowski as "the true hero" in preserving the story of the Lattimer Massacre from historical oblivion. According to Novak's historiography, the Massacre was completely unknown to historians until the Slavic Community on Strike (1968) was published by Victor R. Greene, who mentioned several paragraphs on Lattimer. Novak contacted Greene, who stated that his information on Lattimer was from a largely unnoticed pamphlet printed by Edward Pinkowski in 1950.[6]

Research

His research on Polish trading pioneer Anthony Sadowski led to the discovery of his grave in Douglassville, Pennsylvania in 1966.[7][8] Pinkowski's study of Pulaski led him to believe that his body was buried under the Pulaski monument in Savannah, Georgia, contradicting past historians' reports of him being buried at sea. In 1996, the marble statue was removed for repair, and an unmarked coffin was extracted from underneath. The city of Savannah did not earmark any money to finance a DNA test, so Pinkowski personally paid $30,000 to test the body against DNA of Pulaski's living descendants.[9] The results were inconclusive. Pinkowski researched the Lattimer Massacre extensively, and interviewed two surviving marchers, Andrew Meyer and John Miklos, in the 1940s.[10] Pinkowski archived information on Polish American families and prominent Poles in America, collected on an Internet database, poles.org, which contained over 8,000 entries as of 2014.[11]


Sources

References

  1. "Polish American Historical Association - PAHA Past Awardees". polishamericanstudies.org.
  2. "Edward Pinkowski 2009 "Pride of Polonia Award" Recipient" (PDF). polishamericancenter.org. October 2009.
  3. Staff (2016-07-19). "Edward Pinkowski Proclamation" (PDF). .coopercityfl.org. Retrieved 2016-08-15.
  4. Everett, Donald E. "Review of Pills, Pen & Politics: The Story of General Leon Jastremski, 1843-1907". Journal of Southern History. Southern Historical Association. 41 (4): 575–576. doi:10.2307/2205601. JSTOR 2205601.
  5. Pula, James S. (1975). "Review of Pills, Pen & Politics". Polish American Studies. University of Illinois Press. 32 (2): 75–78. JSTOR 20147936.
  6. The Guns of Lattimer. Transaction Publishers. 1 January 1996. ISBN 978-1-56000-764-7.
  7. "Polish pioneer honored with marker at Douglassville". Reading Eagle. September 19, 1966. Retrieved August 12, 2016.
  8. "State to honor polish pioneer". Reading Eagle. September 11, 1966. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  9. "Tests may help verify Pulaski's burial site". Reading Eagle. February 9, 1996. Retrieved 12 August 2016.
  10. Margaret M. Lyday. "An Interdisciplinary Approach: Michael Novak's The Guns of Lattimer" Pennsylvania History. Vol. 69, No. 1, The Lattimer Massacre of 1897 (Winter 2002), pp. 71-78
  11. "Pinkowski Files". Poles.org. Retrieved August 12, 2016.
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